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1.
The inside-out mode of the patch-clamp method was used to study the effects of internal Mg2+ on single large-conductance (193+/-7 pS) Ca(2+)-activated K+ channels in cultured kidney cells. In the absence of Ca2+, Mg2+ (1 to 10 mM) did not activate the channels but modified the activating effect of Ca2+ ions: it decreased the Hill coefficient (n), reduced the apparent dissociation constant (K0.5), and modified the channel open and closed times. K0.5 was found to be a voltage-dependent parameter. In the absence of Mg2+, it averaged 600 microM at -20 mV and 27 microM at +30 mV (22 degrees C, pH 6.8). Mg2+ at saturating concentrations (5 to 10 mM) decreased K0.5 to 50 microM at -20 mV and to 15 microM at +30 mV. Irrespective of the membrane potential, K0.5 tended to its limit value of about 12.6 microM. Thus, the effects of membrane depolarization and Mg2+ exhibited a non-additive, competitive relationship. Mg2+ perturbed the exponential shape of the voltage dependences of K0.5. The Hill coefficient characterizing the interaction of Ca2+ ions with the channels was found to be voltage-dependent. In the absence of Mg2+, it increased rather sharply from approx. 2 to 3.5 when the membrane potential was raised from -10 to 0 mV. Mg2+ increased n in a dose-dependent manner; however, about a twofold increase of n occurred within a narrow concentration range (2 to 3 mM). The action of Mg2+ on n was, apparently, voltage-independent, and the effects of Mg2+ and voltage on n were seemingly additive.  相似文献   

2.
Cytolysin-induced membrane damage (which requires low Ca2+) has been studied 1) in E by assay of hemolysis, 2) in Lettre cells by measurement of transmembrane potential, intracellular content of K+ and Na+, leakage of phosphoryl[3H]choline or 51Cr from [3H]choline-labeled or 51CrO4(2-)-labeled cells and leakage of lactate dehydrogenase, and 3) in phospholipid bilayers by measurement of electrical conductivity changes. In Lettre cells, damage is restricted and reversible: little lactate dehydrogenase leaks from cells that leak substantial amounts of Na+, K+, and phosphoryl[3H]choline; at low amounts of cytolysin, membrane potential and intracellular content of Na+ and K+ recover within minutes. In E and Lettre cells, membrane damage is inhibited by Zn2+, by high Ca2+, or by low pH. Inhibition is reversible: addition of EGTA to Zn2+-protected E or Lettre cells (incubated in the presence of cytolysin, low Ca2+ and Zn2+) initiates leakage; removal of Zn2+ (and cytolysin and Ca2+) by washing also initiates leakage; such leakage is again sensitive to Zn2+, high Ca2+, or H+. In phospholipid bilayers, channels induced by cytolysin (at low Ca2+) are partially closed by negative voltage; Ca2+, Zn2+, or H+ promote channel closure. Channels are re-opened (only partially in the case of Zn2+) by positive voltage. From all these results it is concluded that the action of cytolysin on membranes is similar to that of other pore-forming agents: damage does not necessarily lead to lysis of nucleated cells, and can be prevented by Ca2+, Zn2+, or H+.  相似文献   

3.
Numerous biological assays and pharmacological studies on various higher plant tissues have led to the suggestion that voltage-dependent plasma membrane Ca2+ channels play prominent roles in initiating signal transduction processes during plant growth and development. However, to date no direct evidence has been obtained for the existence of such depolarization-activated Ca2+ channels in the plasma membrane of higher plant cells. Carrot suspension cells (Daucus carota L.) provide a well-suited system to determine whether voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels are present in the plasma membrane of higher plants and to characterize the properties of putative Ca2+ channels. It is known that both depolarization, caused by raising extracellular K+, and exposure to fungal toxins or oligogalacturonides induce Ca2+ influx into carrot cells. By direct application of patch-clamp techniques to isolated carrot protoplasts, we show here that depolarization of the plasma membrane positive to -135 mV activates Ca(2+)-permeable channels. These voltage-dependent ion channels were more permeable to Ca2+ than K+, while displaying large permeabilities to Ba2+ and Mg2+ ions. Ca(2+)-permeable channels showed slow and reversible inactivation. The single-channel conductance was 13 pS in 40 mM CaCl2. These data provide direct evidence for the existence of voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels in the plasma membrane of a higher plant cell and point to physiological mechanisms for plant Ca2+ channel regulation. The depolarization-activated Ca(2+)-permeable channels identified here could constitute a regulated pathway for Ca2+ influx in response to physiologically occurring stimulus-induced depolarizations in higher plant cells.  相似文献   

4.
K+ channels were recorded in excised, inside-out patches from the apical membrane of the freshly isolated tubule of the caudal portion of the rat epididymis. With asymmetric K+ concentrations in bath and pipette (140 mM K+in/6 mM K+out), the channels had a slope conductance of 54.2 pS at 0 mV. The relative permeability of K+ over Na+ was about 171 to 1. The channels were activated by intracellular Ca2+ and by membrane depolarization. These channels belong to a class defined as "intermediate-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channel. " External tetraethylammonium ions (TEA+) caused a flickery block of the channel with reduction in single-channel current amplitude measured at a range of holding membrane potentials (-40 to 60 mV). Activity of the K+ channels was inhibited by intracellular ATP (KD =1.188 mM). The channel activity was detected only occasionally in patches from the apical membrane (about 1 in 17 patches containing active channels). The presence of the intermediate-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels indicates that they could provide a route for K+ secretion in a Ca2+-dependent process responsible for a high luminal K+ concentration found in the epididymal duct of the rat.  相似文献   

5.
Carbon monoxide (CO) is a gaseous vasodilator produced by many cell types, including endothelial and smooth muscle cells. The goal of the present study was to investigate signaling mechanisms responsible for CO activation of large-conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) (K(Ca)) channels in newborn porcine cerebral arteriole smooth muscle cells. In intact cells at 0 mV, CO (3 microM) or CO released from dimanganese decacarbonyl (10 microM), a novel light-activated CO donor, increased K(Ca) channel activity 4.9- or 3.5-fold, respectively. K(Ca) channel activation by CO was not blocked by 1-H-[1,2,4]oxadiazolo[4,3-a]quinoxalin-1-one (25 microM), a soluble guanylyl cyclase inhibitor. In inside-out patches at 0 mV, CO shifted the Ca(2+) concentration-response curve for K(Ca) channels leftward and decreased the apparent dissociation constant for Ca(2+) from 31 to 24 microM. Western blotting data suggested that the low Ca(2+) sensitivity of newborn K(Ca) channels may be due to a reduced beta-subunit-to-alpha-subunit ratio. CO activation of K(Ca) channels was Ca(2+) dependent. CO increased open probability 3.7-fold with 10 microM free Ca(2+) at the cytosolic membrane surface but only 1.1-fold with 300 nM Ca(2+). CO left shifted the current-voltage relationship of cslo-alpha currents expressed in HEK-293 cells, increasing currents 2.2-fold at +50 mV. In summary, data suggest that in newborn arteriole smooth muscle cells, CO activates low-affinity K(Ca) channels via a direct effect on the alpha-subunit that increases apparent Ca(2+) sensitivity. The optimal tuning by CO of the micromolar Ca(2+) sensitivity of K(Ca) channels will lead to preferential activation by signaling modalities, such as Ca(2+) sparks, which elevate the subsarcolemmal Ca(2+) concentration within this range.  相似文献   

6.
External divalent cations are known to play an important role in the function of voltage-gated ion channels. The purpose of this study was to examine the sensitivity of the voltage-gated K(+) currents of human atrial myocytes to external Ca(2+) ions. Myocytes were isolated by collagenase digestion of atrial appendages taken from patients undergoing coronary artery-bypass surgery. Currents were recorded from single isolated myocytes at 37 degrees C using the whole-cell patch-clamp technique. With 0.5 mM external Ca(2+), voltage pulses positive to -20 mV (holding potential = -60 mV) activated outward currents which very rapidly reached a peak (I(peak)) and subsequently inactivated (tau = 7.5 +/- 0.7 msec at +60 mV) to a sustained level, demonstrating the contribution of both rapidly inactivating transient (I(to1)) and non-inactivating sustained (I(so)) outward currents. The I(to1) component of I(peak), but not I(so), showed voltage-dependent inactivation using 100 msec prepulses (V(1/2) = -35.2 +/- 0.5 mV). The K(+) channel blocker, 4-aminopyridine (4-AP, 2 mM), inhibited I(to1) by approximately 76% and reduced I(so) by approximately 33%. Removal of external Ca(2+) had several effects: (i) I(peak) was reduced in a manner consistent with an approximately 13 mV shift to negative voltages in the voltage-dependent inactivation of I(to1). (ii) I(so) was increased over the entire voltage range and this was associated with an increase in a non-inactivating 4-AP-sensitive current. (iii) In 79% cells (11/14), a slowly inactivating component was revealed such that the time-dependent inactivation was described by a double exponential time course (tau(1) = 7.0 +/- 0.7, tau(2) = 90 +/- 21 msec at +60 mV) with no effect on the fast time constant. Removal of external Ca(2+) was associated with an additional component to the voltage-dependent inactivation of I(peak) and I(so) (V(1/2) = -20.5 +/- 1.5 mV). The slowly inactivating component was seen only in the absence of external Ca(2+) ions and was insensitive to 4-AP (2 mM). Experiments with Cs(+)-rich pipette solutions suggested that the Ca(2+)-sensitive currents were carried predominantly by K(+) ions. External Ca(2+) ions are important to voltage-gated K(+) channel function in human atrial myocytes and removal of external Ca(2+) ions affects I(to1) and 4-AP-sensitive I(so) in distinct ways.  相似文献   

7.
Bacteriophages P22 and dp8 cause the membrane potential depolarization for 10-30 mV, reversal rapid H+ influx into bacteria and K+ exit from S. typhimurium LT2, these effects depend on infection plural and are observed only in the presence of Ca+2 in the medium. delta psi depolarization and K+ efflux induced by phage dp8 are increased with the growth of Mg+2 concentration from 0 to 2 mM. Changes of delta pH and also Na+,Ca+2 concentrations are not observed. In the presence of glucose phage infection leads to changes in H(+)-K(+)-exchange. The phages P22 and dp8 adsorption on bacteria causes changes in the form or turn of the channels in S. typhimurium membrane.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of membrane potential, acetylcholine, carbachol and atropine on the myometrium plasmatic membrane Ca2+/H+ exchange was estimated. The change of artificially directed membrane potential from -40 to +20 mV was defined to provide for increasing the input of Ca2+ into vesicules and output of H+ from them in their concentration gradients. The similar changes of cations in membranes were registered under acetylcholine (10(-8)-10(-4) M) and carbachol (0.1 mM) action. Atropine displayed itself as decreasing the cholinomimetics effect to the tested ions transport. The exogenous 0.5 mM Ca2+ free of directed membrane potential as well stimulated the output of protons from vesicles. The supposition was made regarding H output strengthening and pH possible local increase of cytoplasm under the smooth cells activation by the membrane potential and acetylcholine.  相似文献   

9.
The influence of K+ ions on the components of the transmembrane proton motive force (delta mu H+) in intact bacteria was investigated. In K+-depleted cells of the glycolytic bacterium STreptococcus faecalis the addition of K+ ions caused a depolarization of the membrane by about 60 mV. However, since the depolarization was compensated for by an increase in the transmembrane pH gradient (delta pH), the total proton motive force remained almost constant at about 120 mV. Half-maximal changes in the potential were observed at K+ concentrations at which the cells accumulated K+ ions extensively. In EDTA-treated, K+-depleted cells of Escherichia coli K-12, the addition of K+ ions to the medium caused similar, although smaller changes in the components of delta mu H+. Experiments with various E. coli K-12 K+ transport mutants showed that for the observed potential changes the cells required either a functional TrkA or Kdp K+ transport system. These data are interpreted to mean that the inward movement of K+ ions via each of these bacterial transport systems is electrogenic. Consequently, it leads to a depolarization of the membrane, which in its turn allows the cell to pump more protons into the medium.  相似文献   

10.
Dependence of the red blood cell calcium pump on the membrane potential   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
(1) It is shown that the rate of calcium extrusion from intact human red cells is faster at a membrane potential of approximately +50 mV (inside) than at approximately -50 mV. (2) The positive potential applied was the chloride potential of KCl cells in a K-gluconate medium when the Ca2+ sensitive K+ channel was blocked by 0.3mM quinidine. The negative potential resulted from the high K+ permeability in Ca2+ loaded cells (the cells were loaded to a Ca2+ activity in the cell water of about 50 microM). (3) It is further demonstrated that the Ca2+ affinity of the pump ATPase is decreased both at the internal (high affinity) and external (low affinity) site by increasing the proton concentration. Acidification thus inhibits internally and stimulates externally. (4) An indirect effect of the membrane potential on the pump activity via the accompanying pH shifts on either side of the membrane could be ruled out by choosing Ca2+ concentrations which are fully activating at the internal Ca2+ binding site at pH 6.5 and not yet inhibitory at the external Ca2+ binding site at pH 8. (5) The result is compatible with the assumption that the human red cell Ca-pump is exchanging Ca2+ for protons, yet is electrogenic by virtue of a stoichiometry of 1H+:1Ca2+ for this exchange.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of the membrane potential (K(+)-valinomycin system) on the Mg2+, ATP-dependent transport of Ca2+ in inside-out vesicles of myometrium sarcolemma has been studied. The membrane potential was identified by using a cyanine potential-sensitive probe, diS-C3-(5). In the presence of valinomycin (5.10(-8) M) the inside-out directed K+ gradient (delta psi = -86 mV, with a negative charge inside) stimulated the initial rate of the energy-dependent accumulation of Ca2+ transfer whereas the oppositely directed K+ gradient (delta psi = +72 mV, with a positive charge inside) had no effect on this process. The K+ gradient was formed by isotonic substitution of K+ in intra- or extravesicular space for choline +. At the same time, in the absence of K+ gradient the Mg2+, ATP-dependent accumulation of Ca2+ in membrane vesicles did not depend on the chemical nature of the cations (K+ or choline+) used for isotonicity. The decrease of delta psi from 0 to -86 mV affects the initial rate of Ca2+ accumulation but not the maximal content of the accumulated cation. Preliminary dissipation of the membrane potential (delta psi = -86 mV) in Mg2(+)-free isotonic (with respect of K+ and choline+) media containing ATP and Ca2+ resulted in the inhibition of Mg2+, ATP-dependent Ca2+ transport induced by subsequent addition of Mg2+. These results indicate that the negative (intravesicular) electrical potential activates the Ca-pump of smooth muscle sarcolemma. This activation is based on the increase in the turnover number of the Ca2+ transporting system but not on its affinity for the transfer substrate. The use of the absolute reaction rates theory made it possible to establish that the Ca-pump effectuates the transport of a single positive charge in inside-out vesicles of smooth muscle plasma membranes, i.e., the energy-dependent transport of Ca2+ occurs either as a symport (with an anion (Cl-) or an antiport with a monovalent cation (K+) or a proton. It is assumed that the potential dependence of the Ca-pump in the smooth muscle plasma membrane plays a role in the realization of effects of mediators and physiologically active substances that are manifested as stimulation of the contractile response and depolarization of the sarcolemma. In is quite probable that the delta psi-dependent Ca-pump is also responsible for the maintenance of intracellular homeostasis of monovalent cations (K+, H+, Cl-) in smooth muscle tissues.  相似文献   

12.
Deafness is a serious condition that affects millions of people and can also lead to dementia. Moreover, Karet and associates reported in 1999 that mutations in the gene encoding H(+) V-ATPase subunit B(1) lead to deafness. Yet ionic flows that enable humans to hear high-pitched sounds at 20,000 cycles/sec (20 kHz) are not well understood. Sound is transduced to electrical signals by stereocilia of hair cells by influx of Ca(2+) and K(+) as the "transducer channel" opens transiently and reduces the ~90 mV (endolymph positive) endocochlear potential (EP) by ~20 mV as the receptor potential. The EP as well as concentrations of Ca(2+), H(+) and K(+) must remain constant to produce reliable signals. Ca(2+) entry is balanced by Ca(2+) exit via a plasma membrane Ca(2+) ATPase (PMCA2a) but the Ca(2+) exit is coupled to H(+) entry. Moreover, K(+) entry is balanced by K(+) exit via a long diffusion route through several channels which is too slow to account for 20 kHz signaling. The problem is solved by a new hypothesis in which an H(+) V-ATPase generates the EP and removes the H(+) while a new K(+)/H(+) antiporter uses the voltage to drive H(+) back in and the K(+) back out. In the new model, Ca(2+), H(+) and K(+) cycle between unstirred layers on the endolymph- and cytoplasmic- borders of the stereocilial membrane through distances of ~20 nanometers with travel time of ~10 μs, which is fast enough to account for the 50 μs open/close time for 20 kHz signaling. Central to this model is the hypothesis that a K(+) pump which secretes K(+) into a K(+)-rich compartment is composed of a voltage producing (electrogenic) H(+) V-ATPase that is electrically coupled to a voltage-driven (electrophoretic) K(+)/nH(+) antiporter (KHA). Conversely, for an H(+) V-ATPase to secrete K(+) into a K(+) rich compartment, it must be coupled to a KHA. Richard Keynes reviewed evidence in 1969 that such a K(+) pump, which he called a Type V pump, is present in the stria vascularis of cochlea and the goblet cell apical membrane of caterpillars. Its signature is a large outside positive potential of ~100 mV, K(+) secretion into a K(+) rich compartment and reversible inhibition by anoxia. The key role of the Type V K(+) pump in generating the EP was recognized by Sellick and Bock in 1974 and others but has disappeared from the hearing literature during the past decades. Its revival here is based on immunolocalization of KHA2 in the stereocilial membrane and Gillespie's generously shared mass spectroscopy evidence that all but one of the V(1) ATPase subunits are detected in isolated chicken stereocilia but V(o) and KHAs are not detected (implying that KHAs must be in the membrane). The new model proposed in the present paper could lead to important changes in our understanding of sensory physiology.  相似文献   

13.
In cardiac cells that lack macroscopic transient outward K(+) currents (I(to)), the removal of extracellular Ca(2+) can unmask "I(to)-like" currents. With the use of pig ventricular myocytes and the whole cell patch-clamp technique, we examined the possibility that cation efflux via L-type Ca(2+) channels underlies these currents. Removal of extracellular Ca(2+) and extracellular Mg(2+) induced time-independent currents at all potentials and time-dependent currents at potentials greater than -50 mV. Either K(+) or Cs(+) could carry the time-dependent currents, with reversal potential of +8 mV with internal K(+) and +34 mV with Cs(+). Activation and inactivation were voltage dependent [Boltzmann distributions with potential of half-maximal value (V(1/2)) = -24 mV and slope = -9 mV for activation; V(1/2) = -58 mV and slope = 13 mV for inactivation]. The time-dependent currents were resistant to 4-aminopyridine and to DIDS but blocked by nifedipine at high concentrations (IC(50) = 2 microM) as well as by verapamil and diltiazem. They could be increased by BAY K-8644 or by isoproterenol. We conclude that the I(to)-like currents are due to monovalent cation flow through L-type Ca(2+) channels, which in pig myocytes show low sensitivity to nifedipine.  相似文献   

14.
Ca2+ influx via voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels is known to be elicited during action potentials but possibly also occurs at the resting potential. The steady-state current through voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels and its role for the electrical activity was, therefore, investigated in pituitary GH3 cells. Applying the recently developed 'nystatin-modification' of the patch-clamp technique, most GH3 cells (18 out of 23 cells) fired spontaneous action potentials from a baseline membrane potential of 43.7 +/- 4.6 mV (mean +/- s.d., n = 23). The frequency of action potentials was stimulated about twofold by Bay K 8644 (100 nM), a Ca(2+)-channel stimulator, and action potentials were completely suppressed by the Ca(2+)-channel blocker PN 200-110 (100 nM). Voltage clamping GH3 cells at fixed potentials for several minutes and with 1 mM Ba2+ as divalent charge carrier, we observed steady-state Ca(2+)-channel currents that were dihydropyridine-sensitive and displayed a U-shaped current-voltage relation. The results strongly suggest that the observed long lasting, dihydropyridine-sensitive Ca(2+)-channel currents provide a steady-state conductivity for Ca2+ at the resting potential and are essential for the generation of action potentials in GH3 pituitary cells.  相似文献   

15.
Membrane adenosine triphosphatase activities in rat pancreas   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The membrane ATPase activities present in rat pancreas were studied to investigate the possible role of ATPase enzymes in HCO3(-) secretion in the pancreas. It was found that all the HCO3(-)-sensitive (anion-sensitive) ATPase activity was accountable as pancreatic mitochondrial ATPase, thus supporting the view that a distinct plasma membrane 'bicarbonate-ATPase' is not involved in HCO3(-) secretion in pancreas. A remarkably high Mg+- and CA2+-requiring ATPase activity (30 mumol ATP hydrolysed/min per mg) was found in the plasma membrane fraction (rho = 1.10-1.13). This activity has been characterized in some detail. It is inhibited by p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyladenosine, an affinity label analogue of ATP and the analogue appears to label covalently a protein of Mr approximately 35 000. The (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase activity did not form a 'phosphorylated-intermediate' and was vanadate-insensitive. These and other tests have served to demonstrate that the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase activity is different in properties from (Na+ + K+)-ATPase, Ca2+-ATPase, (H+ + K+)-ATPase or mitochondrial H+-ATPase. Apart from the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase of plasma membrane and mitochondrial ATPase, the only other membrane ATPase activities noted were (Na+ + K+)-ATPase, which occurred in the same fractions as the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-AtPase at rho = 1.10-1.13 and was of surprisingly low activity, and an ATPase activity in light membrane fractions (rho - 1.08-1.09) derived from zymogen granule membranes. At this time, therefore, there is no obvious candidate for an ATPase activity at the luminal surface of pancreatic cells which is directly involved in ion transport, but the results presented here direct attention to the high activity (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase in the plasma membrane fraction.  相似文献   

16.
Mechanotransduction is required for a wide variety of biological functions. The aim of this study was to determine the effect of activation of a mechanosensitive Ca(2+) channel, present in human jejunal circular smooth muscle cells, on whole cell currents and on membrane potential. Currents were recorded using patch-clamp techniques, and perfusion of the bath (10 ml/min, 30 s) was used to mechanoactivate the L-type Ca(2+) channel. Perfusion resulted in activation of L-type Ca(2+) channels and an increase in outward current from 664 +/- 57 to 773 +/- 72 pA at +60 mV. Membrane potential hyperpolarized from -42 +/- 4 to -50 +/- 5 mV. In the presence of nifedipine (10 microM), there was no increase in outward current or change in membrane potential with perfusion. In the presence of charybdotoxin or iberiotoxin, perfusion of the bath did not increase outward current or change membrane potential. A model is proposed in which mechanoactivation of an L-type Ca(2+) channel current in human jejunal circular smooth muscle cells results in increased Ca(2+) entry and cell contraction. Ca(2+) entry activates large-conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channels, resulting in membrane hyperpolarization and relaxation.  相似文献   

17.
Three Ca(2+)-dependent procedures known to increase cation permeability of red blood cell membranes were tested with Cd2+ ions which equal Ca2+ ions both in their charge and the crystal radius, 1. Increase of non-selective permeability for monovalent cations by incubating the red cells in a Ca(2+)-free sucrose medium. Addition of Cd2+ to the suspension of leaky cells failed to restore the initial impermeability of the red cell membrane while a repairing effect of Ca2+ was evident both in the presence and absence of Cd2+. Thus, in low electrolyte medium, Cd2+ could neither mimic Ca2+, nor prevent the latter from interacting with membrane structures which control cation permeability. 2. Increase of the K(+)-selective permeability by propranolol plus Ca2+. Cd2+ added to a Ca(2+)-free Ringer type medium containing propranolol enhanced K+ permeability similar to that obtained with Ca2+. No changes of membrane permeability could be detected in the presence of 0.5 mmol/l Cd2+ in absence of propranolol. The Cd(2+)-stimulated K+ channels were different from those induced by Ca2+. They proved to be insensitive to quinine, exhibited a low K+/Na+ selectivity, and showed no tendency to self-inactivation. 3. Stimulation of K+ permeability by electron donors plus Ca2+. Substitution of Ca2+ by Cd2+ yielded results similar to those obtained with propranolol. The ability of Cd2+ to overtake the role of Ca2+ appears to depend on the system studied. It supplies information allowing to distinguish between the diverse Ca(2+)-dependent systems in cell membranes.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of acetylcholine (ACh) and histamine (His) on the membrane potential and current were examined in JR-1 cells, a mucin-producing epithelial cell line derived from human gastric signet ring cell carcinoma. The tight-seal, whole cell clamp technique was used. The resting membrane potential, the input resistance, and the capacitance of the cells were approximately -12 mV, 1.4 G ohms, and 50 pF, respectively. Under the voltage-clamp condition, no voltage-dependent currents were evoked. ACh or His added to the bathing solution hyperpolarized the membrane by activating a time- and voltage- independent K+ current. The ACh-induced hyperpolarization and K+ current persisted, while the His response desensitized quickly (< 1 min). These effects of ACh and His were mediated predominantly by m3- muscarinic and H1-His receptors, respectively. The K+ current induced by ACh and His was inhibited by charybdotoxin, suggesting that it is a Ca(2+)-activated K+ channel current (IK.Ca). The measurement of intracellular Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) using Indo-1 revealed that both agents increased [Ca2+]i with similar time courses as they increased IK.Ca. When EGTA in the pipette solution was increased from 0.15 to 10 mM, the induction of IK.Ca by ACh and His was abolished. Thus, both ACh and His activate IK.Ca by increasing [Ca2+]i in JR-1 cells. In the Ca(2+)-free bathing solution (0.15 mM EGTA in the pipette), ACh evoked IK.Ca transiently. Addition of Ca2+ (1.8 mM) to the bath immediately restored the sustained IK.Ca. These results suggest that the ACh response is due to at least two different mechanisms; i.e., the Ca2+ release-related initial transient activation and the Ca2+ influx-related sustained activation of IK.Ca. Probably because of desensitization, the Ca2+ influx-related component of the His response could not be identified. Intracellularly applied inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3), with and without inositol 1,3,4,5-tetrakisphosphate (IP4), mimicked the ACh response. IP4 alone did not affect the membrane current. Under the steady effect of IP3 or IP3 plus IP4, neither ACh nor His further evoked IK.Ca. Intracellular application of heparin or of the monoclonal antibody against the IP3 receptor, mAb18A10, inhibited the ACh and His responses in a concentration-dependent fashion. Neomycin, a phospholipase C (PLC) inhibitor, also inhibited the agonist-induced response in a concentration-dependent fashion. Although neither pertussis toxin (PTX) nor N-ethylmaleimide affected the ACh or His activation of IK,Ca, GDP beta S attenuated and GTP gamma S enhanced the agonist response.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
Calcium (Ca2+) is sequestered into vacuoles of oat root cells through a H+/Ca2+ antiport system that is driven by the proton-motive force of the tonoplast H+-translocating ATPase. The antiport has been characterized directly by imposing a pH gradient in tonoplast-enriched vesicles. The pH gradient was imposed by diluting K+-loaded vesicles into a K+-free medium. Nigericin induced a K+/H+ exchange resulting in a pH gradient of 2 (acid inside). The pH gradient was capable of driving 45Ca2+ accumulation. Ca2+ uptake was tightly coupled to H+ loss as increasing Ca2+ levels progressively dissipated the steady state pH gradient. Ca2+ uptake displayed saturation kinetics with a Km(app) for Ca2+ of 10 microM. The relative affinity of the antiporter for transport of divalent cations was Ca2+ greater than Sr2+ greater than Ba2+ greater than Mg2+. La3+ or Mn2+ blocked Ca2+ uptake possibly by occupying the Ca2+-binding site. Ruthenium red (I50 = 40 microM) and N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (I50 = 3 microM) specifically inhibited the H+/Ca2+ antiporter. When driven by pH jumps, the H+/Ca2+ exchange generated a membrane potential, interior positive, as shown by [14C]SCN accumulation. Furthermore, Ca2+ uptake was stimulated by an imposed negative membrane potential. The results support a simple model of one Ca2+ taken up per H+ lost. The exchange transport can be reversed, as a Ca2+ gradient (Ca2+in greater than Ca2+out) was effective in forming a pH gradient (acid inside). We suggest that the H+/Ca2+ exchange normally transports Ca2+ into the vacuole; however, under certain conditions, Ca2+ may be released into the cytoplasm via this antiporter.  相似文献   

20.
A delayed rectifier potassium current in Xenopus oocytes.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
A delayed voltage-dependent K+ current endogenous to Xenopus oocytes has been investigated by the voltage-clamp technique. Both activation and inactivation of the K+ current are voltage-dependent processes. The K+ currents were activated when membrane potential was depolarized from a holding potential of -90 to -50 mV. The peak current was reached within 150 ms at membrane potential of +30 mV. Voltage-dependent inactivation of the current was observed by depolarizing the membrane potential from -50 to 0 mV at 10-mV increments. Voltage-dependent inactivation was a slow process with a time constant of 16.5 s at -10 mV. Removal of Ca2+ from the bath has no effect on current amplitudes, which indicates that the current is Ca2+)-insensitive. Tail current analysis showed that reversal potentials were shifted by changing external K+ concentration, as would be expected for a K(+)-selective channel. The current was sensitive to quinine, a K+ channel blocker, with a Ki of 35 microM. The blockade of quinine is voltage-independent in the range of -20 to +60 mV. Whereas oocytes from the same animal have a relatively homogeneous current distribution, average amplitude of the K+ current varied among oocytes from different animals from 30 to 400 nA at membrane potential of +30 mV. Our results indicate the presence of the endogenous K+ current in Xenopus oocytes with characteristics of the delayed rectifier found in some nerve and muscle cells.  相似文献   

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